Scopolamine provocation-based pharmacological MRI model for testing procognitive agents

Nikolett Hegedüs*, Judit Laszy, István Gyertyán, Pál Kocsis, Dávid Gajári, Szabolcs Dávid, Levente Deli, Zsófia Pozsgay, Károly Tihanyi

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

There is a huge unmet need to understand and treat pathological cognitive impairment. The development of disease modifying cognitive enhancers is hindered by the lack of correct pathomechanism and suitable animal models. Most animal models to study cognition and pathology do not fulfil either the predictive validity, face validity or construct validity criteria, and also outcome measures greatly differ from those of human trials. Fortunately, some pharmacological agents such as scopolamine evoke similar effects on cognition and cerebral circulation in rodents and humans and functional MRI enables us to compare cognitive agents directly in different species. In this paper we report the validation of a scopolamine based rodent pharmacological MRI provocation model. The effects of deemed procognitive agents (donepezil, vinpocetine, piracetam, alpha 7 selective cholinergic compounds EVP-6124, PNU-120596) were compared on the blood-oxygen-level dependent responses and also linked to rodent cognitive models. These drugs revealed significant effect on scopolamine induced blood-oxygen-level dependent change except for piracetam. In the water labyrinth test only PNU-120596 did not show a significant effect. This provocational model is suitable for testing procognitive compounds. These functional MR imaging experiments can be paralleled with human studies, which may help reduce the number of false cognitive clinical trials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)447-455
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Psychopharmacology
Volume29
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2015

Keywords

  • BOLD
  • cognition
  • cognitive enhancer
  • fMRI
  • nootropics
  • rat
  • scopolamine
  • water labyrinth test

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